Equipment

With Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, Black Myth- Wukong, and Star Wars Outlaws, ray tracing in games is slowly becoming an Nvidia-exclusive-

At this year’s Gamescom event, two forthcoming games heavily feature ray tracing as the means for producing the best possible graphics. Star Wars Outlaws and Indiana Jones and the Great Circle both have graphics features, either exclusively developed by Nvidia or are so demanding that only high-end GeForce RTX cards can really handle it.

Nvidia was the first GPU vendor to bring real-time ray tracing hardware to the gaming masses at another Gamescom in 2018, with its GeForce RTX 20-series graphics cards. But since then, AMD and Intel have both followed suit, and all new gaming PCs and consoles are more or less capable of ray tracing. Most PC gamers are well aware that Nvidia’s GPUs can do ray tracing faster than the competition but three games show that Nvidia is doing its best to push the technology to new heights—and very much in its favour.

Take the recently launched Black Myth: Wukong. Its graphics are spectacular but to get the very best visuals, you need to enable a setting called Full Ray Tracing. The game runs on Unreal Engine 5 and it uses Lumen ray-traced global illumination by default. However, ‘full ray tracing’ is a path tracing algorithm.

If you’re a hardware enthusiast, you’ll already know about path tracing but even if you don’t, you may well have already come across it in Cyberpunk 2077 or more recently, a mod for Doom 2. Path tracing is actually a whole bunch of different algorithms but the general idea is that it’s a means to let developers push the amount of ray tracing taking place, without utterly tanking the performance. It’s still very demanding but the results are super impressive.

At Gamescom 2024, it was announced that the forthcoming Indiana Jones and the Great Circle game will also have path tracing—sorry, Full Ray Tracing. Now, there’s no indication whatsoever that the option will only work on GeForce RTX cards but given how demanding it is, you can be pretty sure that just the likes of the RTX 4080 Super or RTX 4090 will be able to run at a decent frame rate.

Mind you, Black Myth: Wukong runs quite well with path—darn it—Full Ray Tracing enabled on mid-range RTX graphics cards, as long as you keep the resolution down and use lots of upscaling and frame generation. In theory, AMD and Intel GPUs should run it too but my own testing showed that the performance hit is far too big to make it worth using.

And then there’s Star Wars Outlaws, which is due for release August 30. That doesn’t have Full Path Tracing (I’m going to call it FRT from now on) but it does feature an Nvidia technology: RTX Direct Illumination or RTXDI, for short. 

Now, any GPU that supports DirectX Ray Tracing 1.0 (aka DXR) or better can run this algorithm but, while I’m not allowed to give any specifics, I’ll give you just one guess as to which GPU tech runs it the best, in terms of raw speed and lack of bugs.

I personally spend quite a bit of my free time messing about with DXR coding and using Lumen in Unreal Engine 5, so it’s clear that I’m somewhat biased when it comes to having an opinion on the use of ray tracing in games. But if more and more games start to feature FRT as being the only way to get the best possible graphics or utilise more of Nvidia’s APIs for ray tracing, I am a little worried that the whole thing is slowly becoming a one horse race.

Not that ray tracing is a race, of course, but let’s be honest here—the technology is going to be used increasingly more in games, especially the big-budget ones, and consoles are only going to become more capable in this aspect.

The latter is the best counterpoint to Nvidia’s dominance in the ray tracing industry as consoles are powered by AMD chips and developers that make games exclusively for that platform only need to think about how RDNA RT units handle it all.

But in the world of PC gaming, it’s pretty much RTX all the way, be it hardware or software, right now. That’s great news if you’re an Nvidia shareholder, less so if you have an Arc or Radeon graphics card.

With regards to AMD’s desktop PC graphics cards, it’s expected that RNDA 4 will have improved ray tracing units but at the same time, it’s looking unlikely that there will be any high-end models sporting these chips.

As for Intel’s next-gen Battlemage GPUs—well, with the senior management hell-bent on saving big chunks of money, there’s a chance that the hardware is fine but the software support won’t be as good.

Don’t get me wrong, Nvidia has made some pretty amazing stuff for PC gaming, be it hardware or comprehensive software kits. But I rather hope that hope that game developers just use Black Myth: Wukong as inspiration for what modern graphics can look like, rather than being the best way to implement ray tracing.

Related Posts

Monkey Island creator Ron Gilbert’s next game is ‘classic Zelda meets Diablo meets Thimbleweed Park’-

Ron Gilbert, famed for his work on classic adventures including Monkey Island, Maniac Mansion, Zak McKracken, and more recently Thimbleweed Park, is getting up to something new and that looks to be quite different from his past work. It doesn’t have a name yet, but it’s described on Gilbert’s Terrible Toybox website as “classic Zelda meets Diablo meets Thimbleweed Park.”

Gilbert’s been posting about his new game on Mastodon (via Time Extension) since early 2024, but it’s gone largely unnoticed until just recently. In February, he shared an image of a whiteboard rough-out of the opening area and quests, and a little bit of stats work; from there, he’s posted a few more in-progress images, along with some brief thoughts about his process.

“I have been working on it for a year …

Animated Tomb Raider series gets a teaser trailer, release date-

Watch On

It looks like Netflix animated series Tomb Raider: The Legend of Lara Croft will release on October 10, 2024. The series will follow up on the most modern Tomb Raider Trilogy (Tomb Raider, Rise of the Tomb Raider, Shadow of the Tomb Raider) and serve as a kind of bridge between that trilogy and the original games.

The trailer shows Lara in a variety of environments, from jungles to deserts, fighting with a signature bow and also some kind of… sword… whip… thing. She’s also got a scene on that vintage Harley-Davidson every action hero finds themself on at some point or another. I’m surprised there are any of those left, really, at the rate that these heroes seem to wreck them.

Lara Croft will be voiced by Hayley Atwell, most famous for portraying Peggy Carter i…

Romania’s got a new government AI advisor- ‘My role is to represent you, like a mirror.’-

The Romanian cabinet was introduced to its newest member on Wednesday: what prime minister Nicolae Ciucă described as an “honorary adviser” called Ion (via Politico). It’s an AI tool developed by Romanian scientists which is designed to sift through data and “quickly and automatically capture the opinions and desires” of citizens, says Ciucă. “We are talking about the first government adviser to use artificial intelligence.”

Ion takes input via speech and text, and outputs through an on-screen face and computerised vocalisations. It’s connected to this website on which Romanian citizens can submit their complaints and ideas about government services, and can also take input through being tagged on social media and will have terminals at some locations such …

Pokémon Worlds competitor gets disqualified straight after winning the quarter-finals, thanks to a rude hand gesture-

The Pokémon World Championships (or Worlds) kicked off in Hawaii last week, and since then, we’ve seen the best TCG players in the world duke it out for the top spot. The competition’s winners have already been announced, but I think we’ve found the prize for the most controversial decision. 

One competitor, Ian Robb, sat down opposite Fernando Cifuentes in the masters quarter-finals. After a hard-fought battle, Robb came out on top, so it looked like he would progress to the next stage of the tournament. However, when the next battle began, fans in the audience were confused to see Cifuentes, not Robb, sitting in the challenger’s seat. 

It turns out that The Pokémon Company’s international global esports and events director, Chris Brown, had to step …

Steam’s second-most-anticipated game is finally going to show some footage just a month before it launches-

You may have forgotten about The Day Before by now. It was first announced in January 2021 as “an open-world MMO survival” game, and then in April of that year we got a 10-minute gameplay video. And that’s really been it—nothing of substance has been heard about the game since.

That situation will soon change, though, as developer Fntastic says that it will reveal “raw gameplay footage” from The Day Before later this month.

“We are pleased to inform you that the wait for news regarding our game release is coming to an end,” Fntastic wrote in a Discord announcement. “After careful consideration and discussions with our leadership team, we have received approval to share the information you have been eagerly anticipating.

“This month, we will be releasing raw gamep…

The mathematical constant of Pi is playing Pokémon on Twitch—after 25,000 hours it’s curbstomped two children and power-levelled its starter, but is yet to escape the first town

It’s all gotten out of hand. They’ve got concepts playing games now. Specifically, the venerable genre of Twitch Plays—those times when a swarming Twitch chat competes for control over games like Pokémon, and Dark Souls—has evolved to the point that Pi is currently playing Pokémon Sapphire. Actually, it’s been playing it for three years (via GamesRadar).

That’s Pi as in the mathematical constant. The one you probably know as (at least) 3.14 but which goes on, well, forever if you let it. The way it works is this: Every digit between 0 and 9 has been assigned to a button on the Game Boy Advance (some buttons have two digits assigned). The computer then simply proceeds through digits of Pi sequentially and makes the corresponding input. For examp…